A non-creedal missional community in a progressive ecumenical universalist christian way, 5920 N. Owasso Ave, Turley, OK 74126 918-691-3223, 794-4637, 430-1150. Service. Community. Discipleship. Worship. All are Welcome. See below or Write to revronrobinson@aol.com for the latest gatherings. We often worship with others on Sunday. We hope you respond to the call to service to and with others in an Abandoned Place of the American Dream Marketplace Empire.

Saturday, October 29, 2011

Part of that has been because of all the
project and partnerships and the presence we are making here in our area of far
north Tulsa; a lot of that you will see just a glimpse of in the report of
things going on today and in the coming days here; but it also continues to be a
time of grief here and that has kept me busy too. During these past few weeks my
mother has died after many years of Alzheimer's (she had spent her entire life
here, and was bedfast for these past five years that so much has been happening
by us here, and yet I know her presence has been with us and will be), and more
suddenly our board member and community activist in north Tulsa Linda Taylor
died, keeping as busy as possible in heart and mind and soul right up to the end
with us and with O'Brien Park here where she had served for 35 years. We had
wonderful celebrations of life for both my mom and for Linda. With Linda's
death, we have lost two of our board members recently; I am pleased to report
that Elaine McDondle, one of our partners in the McLain high school area who has
started Sarah's Residential Living center, for seniors who thrive on a small
home setting, will be joining our board in Gwen's position; we will be looking
for another board member this month too in Linda's position. As we approach All
Souls/All Saints Day, we keep them especially in our hearts, and all others who
have gone before us, but left so much with us, and for us.

Tonight, Saturday Oct. 29, we have our
annual big community celebration we offer each year for Halloween; this will be
our first time in our new and still being renovated space at 5920 N. Owasso
Ave.; but we have a great haunted house and will have scary food, costume
contests, treats and more; come between 6 and 8 pm. Pass on this news and our
other coming events below. And see the commentary
afterwards.

1.Food Pantry, Food
Justice, and Sustainability Space Open Every Tuesday and Thursday, 3 to 6
pm at the community center. Excited to be recertified in our new space and
even though the food bank has been hit hard with a drop off in donations, we are
working to develop several new streams of donations; and we are planning for a
visit from the Mobile Food Van in December and we hope in months after that as
well. Besides giving out food, we will give out information on nutrition, on
growing healthy food, recipes and more.

2.Turley Area
Leadership Planning Group: working on creating the Disaster Response Network,
Incorporation, and Infrastructure planning: Friday Nov. 4, 2 pm, every
First Friday at the community center. This is our deep connections and keeping
the important before us, and not just the constant urging needs. We have lost so
much in school and post office closing and fires and businesses that we need
these times to go deep in our planning and look for ways to plant seeds for
generations to come beyond us. All welcome.

3.TownHall and
Community Connections Meeting with State Rep. Seneca Scott and other
officials, Friday, Nov. 4, 5:30 pm, Tulsa Comm College NE Campus, Apache
and Harvard

4.McLain High School
Homecoming Game and Events Friday, Nov. 4,4949 N. Peoria Ave. We had a great 400 plus
turnout for the Taste of North Tulsa; we have wonderful plans for the new McLain
Foundation for the Spring. We need to show our support for the school and no
better way than an old fashioned rooting for the team at homecoming. McLain last
Spring had 89 of 104 seniors accepted into college, an amazing turnaround
record, but this year with new graduation standards and testing requirements we
are looking at many students and families being hit hard and possibly not being
able to graduate at all. To that end we in our welcome table community are one
of the major sponsors this year of a GEAR UP event at McLain Thurs. Nov. 17 6:30
to 8:30 pm for parents and students and staff to focus on what will be needed to
be able to respond to the new guidelines that have come down from Oklahoma City.

5.What To Do with
Cherokee School building? Community Forum and Workshop with OU Graduate Design
Studio, Sat. Nov. 5, Noon to 4 pm at the community center with Free Lunch
For Participants. This will be our big monthly event for November. Need a big
turnout as we dream of what we can do as a community with this newly abandoned
property complex in the heart of our community and not just wait for what the
school district may have planned. We had a great tour of the building with OU
and with a representative of an area health care center looking at grant
possibilities. We are also working to make sure the alumni reunion for Cherokee
can still take place. Many ideas still to explore not only for how this can be a
turnaround for our community but how this wonderful resource can be a miracle
for the whole Tulsa area.

6.Community Fall
Festival, Sat. Nov. 19, O’Brien Park Recreation Center. This is a
testament in action to Linda Taylor. Because of her illness and death she was
unable to lead the usual fall festival in October so her colleagues in the wider
park system are grouping together to offer this to our northside community. Show
up and keep Linda's spirit alive. Several of us from our community are also on
the Park Advisory Board and we have been working in the garden Linda started and
looking at other ways to help keep her grassroots spirit and service going.

7.Movie Night, Tuesday, Nov. 15, 6:30 pm at the Center,
“Restrepo” documentary on the War in Afghanistan through soldiers’ eyes, and
discussion of Veterans issues and creating a veterans support room at the
Center.

8.Turley Area Alliance Against Crime: Personal, Home, and
Neighborhood Safety meetingsThursday
Nov. 17, 6:30 pm at the center. This group has been active in getting the word
out this past month in the news media about neighborhood
watch.

10.Community Garden Taste and Teach Gatherings Free Every Saturday
9am, the Welcome Table Community Park, 6005 N. Johnstown Ave. Keep
coming to see the ongoing transformation of this blighted area into a place of
beauty, connections, healthy food, and recreating community space. We are giving
firewood away too. We hosted yesterday a visit to the park by the North Tulsa
Leadership Development Council to share our visions and needs; we hosted a visit
by a couple touring the country looking at healing in abandoned places through
sustainable agriculture and community.

14.The Welcome Table Missional Community, Sundays beginning 9:30
am, conversation on progressive Christianity and justice for the poor,
community service, communion, common meal, other worship and prayer classes
coming up; look for vespers, for a series on the beatitudes as a call for social
justice, an Advent series from Jim Wallis and Sojourners. This past Sunday we
did some guerilla gardening and work on the food pantry in between Saving Jesus
video and discussion and our worship and meal and afterwards too. Worship here
is more like a party than a program and so drop in anytime as something will
most likely be happening. In November 11-13 I will be at the fall leadership
training conference in Texas co-teaching a track on exploring and engaging with
your mission field; if you are interested in coming with us let me know; should
be fun. For more go to www.swuuc.org.

15.Call about Thanksgiving Meal. 918-794-4637. Not sure what we will
be doing again this year; we often provide a meal the Sunday before Thanksgiving
and/or on Thanksgiving itself too. I do know we are planning two things for the
Nov. 20 Sunday kicking off Thanksgiving Week: a special worshipful meal and
conversation on how to make all our community or personal meals done in the
spirit of gratitude and justice, facilitated by Christy Moore, one of our
missional progressive partners here; and we will have our annual Reverse
Offering Sunday when we give back money to those in worship to use between then
and Martin Luther King Jr. Sunday when we will give reports on how we spent the
money to make the radical loving and liberating spirit of Jesus more visible in
the world, which is our simple mission.

We have also been planning and working with
our neighbors Greeley Elementary School as our partner here now once Cherokee
closed, and we are paying for its monthly student of the month lunch programs;
plus we have been working with OU Graduate Social Work partners on our service
learning projects for the Spring semester here, so look for more events during
the winter months; which means we have to get that $1000 gas deposit paid for
and all the heating equipment ready to go. For your partnership with us to make
all of the above possible, and all that is coming, we thank you. Donations to us
can be made at www.turleyok.blogspot.com. We don't send out
thank yous nearly often enough and for that we apologize, but know that each one
received is a prayer we hear from you, and a prayer we give back to
you.

Commentary

I just wanted to close by saying it was
five years ago this month that I began to get a vision after listening to you
all in our community, a vision refined at a workshop I was in with Reggie
McNeal, a Southern Baptist missional church leader from South Carolina, a vision
about turning our church inside out and becoming an organic missional community;
by Spring a few months later we had moved out of our then first space here in
Turley on North Peoria and were in our then much bigger space also on North
Peoria, wondering and worrying how we would ever pay its higher rent and
utilities, creating then our library and clothing room and food pantry and
computer center and simple meeting space. We had first talked about what we
thought our community needed, and then we transformed ourselves so that we could
help our community be transformed. Five years later we have lost so much more
than we could have even back then envisioned as we were listening to people talk
about how much had already been lost in our area; and yet five years later we
can write of the things we have just written about above; amazing; we have
changed the spirit of our community, not fully, not ever fully, maybe only in
many ways just a drop in the bucket, a drop of God's "reign" in the bucket, as
we have created a space for building a spirit of abundance and not scarcity, we
have connected partners, we have celebrated and partied amid the ruins, and we
have surprised even ourselves. We keep failing our way to success. We have been,
for five years, to coin a current phrase, Occupying Turley and Far North Tulsa.
So much of our time together is spent in dealing with the urgent daily stuff
that comes up around us, and spent on all of our projects, but it will all be
for nothing if we ever forget that we are blessed to be, to be here in this
place, to be here in this place even now, to be here in this place even now with
one another, to be here in this place even now with one another for others.

Because of all our grief of late, and the
many losses, and because it is coming up on All Souls/All Saints Day, All
Hallow's Eve, here are a few excerpts of prayers for these weeks that come from
the book Praying by Heart by Tulsan Kay Northcutt that have spoken to me of
late:

"Great, living God, for all the families of
this world, we ask your abiding and steadfast love: that father, mother,
stepparent, sister, brother, child, might be to one another an ever-present help
in time of need; that we might know strength in time of sorrow, encouragement
and joy in daily relationships and work...Abide with us in health and in illness
as we abide with one another. Embrace us in our mourning and fears. Strengthen
us, that we might know your strength and sustenance in danger and safety, in
laughter and in sorrow. Be with us, God. Be our rest...Abide with us as we
attend to the falling of leaves, watching the faithful turning of your creation
earth in its cycle of life, birth, fulfillment, and death. We long to be as
faithful in our lives as your creation is in its turning to you...Let Wisdom
build herself a home in which our hearts can heal and be healed from wounds,
heartaches of those we have sinned against, and our pain from those who have
broken our hearts. God, we will never understand illness and suffering; and so,
failing understanding, we will bring our presence to bear like the Marys at the
foot of the cross. But you must bring the light unto our path as we go, or we
will not carry your comfort in our visit. For it is your peace that heals, your
rest that quiets our hearts...Amen.

I.Following the radical Jesus in deeds not creeds; though we may gain much wisdom from the historic creeds, we are not bound by them. Join us in service to our community throughout the week. That is the primary way we become church. Our Welcome Table of Worship is open to all who welcome all, regardless of belief or denomination, race, gender, sexual orientation, age, physical abilities, economic status, or political affiliations. We don’t think Jesus would have it any other way.

Free because God works in freedom so we are non-creedal. We don’t give theological tests for admission, but encourage you to test us and try us to see if this way is for you. Universalist because we believe God is Love and All who abide in Love abide in God, and God’s love is for all for all time. Christian because the generous compassionate way and story of Jesus, is our primary pathway opening up to God. Missional because we are sent to serve others more than ourselves, building up God’s beloved community more than our own, putting our time talent and treasure more into the world than into our own organization. Community because we are made not to be autonomous individuals but to be a people of God.

We are a simple church, but it can be a deep struggle to live toward true freedom, to practice God’s love for all, to follow the liberating Jesus who was crucified for his radical ways of hospitality and justice, to live for and serve others more than self, and to put community first. We invite those who wish to struggle with us, to fail with us, and to continue struggling with us. Worship gatherings and common meal are our times to refresh our spirits for the service of God.

II.Here is a rewrite of the principles from The Center for Progressive Christianity, signalling our approach to religion.

1. The radically loving and liberating Jesus is central to our community's experience of God.2. Jesus isn't the only way to experience God. It is good to let other experiences of God into our lives.3. Communion is the way we worship, and is about God's welcome table for all, and our committment to a life of hospitality and justice throughout the week.4. We will worship and work with anyone toward creating a just and more loving world; we don't give theological tests for being with us.5. How we live in love deepens and reveals our faith more than our particular beliefs do. We honor the uncertainty, and change, of beliefs, but also the risk of committment.6. Freedom is rooted in community, not in individual likes and dislikes, and must be nurtured in community.7. We are called to resist evil done against Creation and against all of the most vulnerable, and must look to our own blessings and privileges of life that are contributing to injustice.

III.The Covenanted Community, adapted and extended from Tich Nhat Hanh:1. We show up.2. We pay atttention3. We speak truth in love4. We stay focused on mission, and flexible on how to accomplish it5. When we fail at 1 through 4, We show up.

IV.The five smooth stones, adapted and altered from James Luther Adams and several sources:1. Truth and meaning is ever being revealed anew, but this can mean also finding truth and meaning in forgotten or neglected or discarded ways.2. Our relationships rest on mutuality and free consent and persuasion, not coercion.3. Our committments are aimed at a just community.4. Goodness must be incarnated in life if it is to be real.5. We acknowledge the power of evil but believe hope and love and an abundant Universe are ultimate.

V.The Three R's of Christian Community Development:1. Relocate to the abandoned places of Empire (or remain, or return)2. Redistribute goods and The Good3. Reconcile peoples who are divided, broken, separate.

VI.The Four Paths of Missional Church: World, We, I, God1. First, Scatter out into the world beyond ourselves and Serve others. We are Sent People because God is a Sending God.2. As we do the first, next Grow loving community, in order to do the first path more fully, and to reflect that God is always a Relational God.3. Then focus on Growing Your Soul, in one's heart, mind, body, and spirit. The more we grow personally the more we have to give along the second path of community.4. Finally, Respond with Worship: Gather together in Gratitude for being able to walk the first three paths and for the Renewal of self needed to sustain our walk with God found in all of these paths.

VII.The Six Spiritual Practices of our Missional Community1. Pray daily2. Worship at least weekly.3. Check in spiritually with another at least monthly4. Go on Retreat at least annually.5. Commit to going on a once in a lifetime pilgrimmage.6. Practice random acts of kindness and beauty daily.

VIII.The 3 Characteristics of an Emerging Church1. Focus on the life of Jesus.2. Blur the artificial boundaries and places of the secular and the spiritual3. Live in Community.